Tactile-Based Whole-Body Compliance with Force Propagation for Mobile Manipulators

Quentin Leboutet, Emmanuel Dean-Leon, Florian Bergner, Gordon Cheng

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

In this paper, we propose a control method, providing mobile robots with whole-body compliance capabilities, in response to multicontact physical interactions with their environment. The external forces applied to the robot, as well as their localization on its kinematic tree, are measured using a multimodal, self-configuring, and self-calibrating artificial skin. We formulate a compliance control law in Cartesian space, as a set of quadratic optimization problems, solved in parallel for each limb involved in the interaction process. This specific formulation makes it possible to determine the torque commands required to generate the desired reactive behaviors, while taking the robot kinematic and dynamic constraints into account. When a given limb fails to produce the desired compliant behavior, the generalized force residual at the considered contact points is propagated to a parent limb in order to be adequately compensated. Hence, the robot's compliance range can be extended in a both robust and easily adjustable manner. The experiments performed on a dual-arm velocity-controlled mobile manipulator show that our methodology is robust to nullspace interactions and robot physical constraints.

Original languageEnglish
Article number8620355
Pages (from-to)330-342
Number of pages13
JournalIEEE Transactions on Robotics
Volume35
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2019

Keywords

  • Active compliance
  • artificial robot skin
  • physical human-robot interaction
  • quadratic programming (QP)

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